The French maison unveils a new coffee table book inspired by the social media age.

The Roger Vivier brand may have been founded at at time when the “old media” still reigned supreme, but it’s the digital revolution that’s taking front in center in its latest tome, #LoveVivier.

Available starting today, the latest coffee table book from the French maison explores the ever-growing presence of the house’s iconic styles through the eyes of 17 of today’s most popular fashion influencers from around the world. Spearheaded by longtime Roger Vivier ambassador Inès de la Fressange and published by Rizzoli, the collector’s book spotlights such digital stars as Camille Charriere, Evangelie Smyrniotaki (Style Heroine), Charlotte Groeneveld (Fashion Guitar), Chriselle Lim and Tamu McPherson, all of whom offer their own directional take on the Roger Vivier brand by way of a collection of Insta-friendly photographs taken on the streets of Paris and around the globe. In addition to the original street style snaps, the picture-heavy book also includes a conversation between de la Fressange and the Man Repeller’s Leandra Medine on the blessing and curse of social media use, as well as an essay by Christene Barberich on the state of today’s digital luxury landscape.

“Luxury today is more than creativity and beauty, it’s a Modus Vivendi: an art of living,” says de la Fressange. “Globally, these select trend-setting and glamorous influencers show us their projection of their daily lives and themselves. This book offers a glimpse of these Roger Vivier addicts. So Parisian, but yet so universal.”

Despite being a quintessential Parisian label, Roger Vivier’s designs manage to fit effortlessly into the influencers’ vastly different styles—a fact that doesn’t escape de la Fressange. “Parisian style is all about mixing together styles, and being effortlessly chic, but with a cool attitude, which is something that young people everywhere are looking for these days, whether they’re from Tokyo or St. Louis, Missouri,” she says. “People around the world receive so much information [through social media], that they’ve become connoisseurs, making elegance and creativity universal.”